MoC Forthcoming, Wishlist, and Random Speculation
-
- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 9:46 am
I'm so excited about all of these...but...I really wish there was a way for someone in the MoC to get these to us americans at reasonable prices, getting around the region resctrictions etc...because...georgie boy aint going away anytime soon which means our economy isn't going to pickup anytime soon...which means the dollar is going to continue to take a whooping...i ordered my first 3 MoC's along with a few other titles from bensons...imagine my horror when i got my statement to see just how bad the exchange rate is...oh well...hopefully they'll be worth it...i've got them in my stack of "too watch"
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 1:20 pm
- Location: New England
- Contact:
- ola t
- They call us neo-cinephiles
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 4:51 am
- Location: Malmo, Sweden
- ben d banana
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:53 pm
- Location: Oh Where, Oh Where?
- Gordon
- Joined: Thu Nov 11, 2004 8:03 am
solaris72 wrote:
The Hour-Glass Sanatorium, what can I say? There is no other film like it. It's creepy, weird and, well... AMAZING! But it hasn't even be released in Poland yet - believe me, I have tried looking! Has' The Saragossa Manuscript is one of my favourite films. He was a great filmmaker.
Ikarie XB-1 was recently restored and a English-subtitled print was on tour in America last year. I have seen the cut and dubbed AIP version, Voyage to the End of the Universe in pan and scan (the film was shot in 2.35:1) which gives a glimpse of the film's austere power. The film should now be regarded as a landmark in sci-fi and fully deserves even a Criterion release.
WOW - I'm not alone! =D>1. Sanatorium pod klepsydra/The Hour-Glass Sanatorium (Wojciech Has, 1973).
and, most unlikely, but I can dream:
6. Ikarie XB-1 (Jindrich Polák, 1963)
The Hour-Glass Sanatorium, what can I say? There is no other film like it. It's creepy, weird and, well... AMAZING! But it hasn't even be released in Poland yet - believe me, I have tried looking! Has' The Saragossa Manuscript is one of my favourite films. He was a great filmmaker.
Ikarie XB-1 was recently restored and a English-subtitled print was on tour in America last year. I have seen the cut and dubbed AIP version, Voyage to the End of the Universe in pan and scan (the film was shot in 2.35:1) which gives a glimpse of the film's austere power. The film should now be regarded as a landmark in sci-fi and fully deserves even a Criterion release.
- Steven H
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 3:30 pm
- Location: NC
I'd like to second these. I love Hani, but Yoshishige seems more plausible because of the new transfers in the aformentioned box set (I'm curious enough about this director that I'd probably buy the first two sets if I had scripts or detailed synopsis of the films). Any MoC people interested in these obscure directors?shirobamba wrote:Hatsukoi Jigoku-hen/The Inferno of First Love by Hani Susumu (in an uncut version)
Erosu purasu gyakusatsu/Eros Plus Massacre by Yoshida Yoshishige
Kaigenrei/ Coup D´Etat by Yodshida (both of which have been just released as part of two wonderful Yoshida boxsets in Japan, but...grrrrrrrr...without subs)
As for Oshima, I've only seen Cruel Story of Youth and found it more pulpy and less personal than many of my favorite Japanese directors of the same era (though I certainly need a second viewing and doubt my opinion).
- Lino
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 6:18 am
- Location: Sitting End
- Contact:
Well, judging by this news provided on the link below, I could say that the next Imamura on the line will be Eijanaika (1981). Let's hope this materializes.
http://www.dvdclassik.com/Critiques/newsv2_z2.htm
http://www.dvdclassik.com/Critiques/newsv2_z2.htm
MK2 annonce 2 double DVD consacrés à Imamura et Kurosawa !
La Vengeance est à moi (Fukushu Suruwa Ware ni Ari - 1979) : Un homme suspecté de meurtre semble s’être suicidé. Mais la police le soupçonne d’avoir simulé sa propre mort. Soudain, il réapparaît sous les traits d’un professeur, comme s’il se moquait ouvertement de ses poursuivants. Chronique de la vie d'un escroc sans scrupule qui finira par assassiner sa maitresse. A travers un fait divers, Imamura entreprend ici une etude scientifique sans faille de la societe japonaise.
Eijanaika (1981) : Durant la période Edo, un homme revient d’exil d’Amérique pour rechercher sa femme. Il se retrouve alors pris au cœur d’une révolution en train de changer le visage du Japon.
Scandale (Shubun - 1950) : Pendant ses vacances, un jeune peintre fait accidentellement la connaissance d’une chanteuse résidant à la même auberge que lui. Un journal à scandales fait circuler une rumeur à leur propos en publiant leur photo. Les jeunes gens attaquent le magazine en justice mais leur avocat accepte un pot-au-vin en échange de l’abandon de l’affaire.
L'Idiot (Hakuchi - 195) 1: Un homme marqué par la vie rejoint la ville d’origine de son camarade de guerre. Il s’implique alors dans un triangle amoureux aux conséquences tragiques. D’après le roman de Dostoievski.
Pour les deux coffrets :
Format d'image: 1:33 4/3
Format audio : Japonais Mono
Sous-titres: Français
Les suppléments ne sont pas encore connus.
Date de sortie : 12 juillet 2005
- Pinback
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:50 pm
If Eijanaika is indeed going to be #18, that would mean there'd only be one Kinoshita, right (#19)? Which makes me confused about this quote:Annie Mall wrote:Well, judging by this news provided on the link below, I could say that the next Imamura on the line will be Eijanaika (1981). Let's hope this materializes.
FilmFanSea wrote:Nick (peerpee) has also indicated that MOC #18 & 19 will be films from Japanese director Keisuke KINOSHITA
- solaris72
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 3:03 pm
- Location: Baltimore, MD
I must cop to not having seen The Hour-Glass Sanatorium, but I'm dying to see it. Bruno Schulz is my favorite writer, and I just love the Brothers Quay interpretation of Street of Crocodiles, and the things I've heard about Has' take on Sanatorium make me really eager to see it.Gordon McMurphy wrote:The Hour-Glass Sanatorium, what can I say? There is no other film like it. It's creepy, weird and, well... AMAZING! But it hasn't even be released in Poland yet - believe me, I have tried looking! Has' The Saragossa Manuscript is one of my favourite films. He was a great filmmaker.
Ikarie XB-1 was recently restored and a English-subtitled print was on tour in America last year. I have seen the cut and dubbed AIP version, Voyage to the End of the Universe in pan and scan (the film was shot in 2.35:1) which gives a glimpse of the film's austere power. The film should now be regarded as a landmark in sci-fi and fully deserves even a Criterion release.
I saw the gorgeous, restored cinemascope print of Ikarie XB-1 when it came to the Museum of Fine Arts. I'd heard so many good things about it, and had been trying to see it properly for years. It was everything I'd hoped...haunting, alien, mysterious. I have a bootleg original language uncut (I think it's uncut) letterbox DVD (no subtitles) that I managed to acquire from a seller in Eastern Europe through eBay, though the quality is shit. I would kill for MoC or Criterion (maybe through their rumored cult division) to do this film justice.
- backstreetsbackalright
- Joined: Fri Dec 17, 2004 6:49 pm
- Location: 313
Some miscellaneous wishlist items for MoC's consideration:
Akerman -- Jeanne Dielman or Les Rendez-Vous d'Anna. Or better, News From Home or a documentary.
Bellocchio -- Fists in the Pocket. (Never had the opportunity to see this.)
Erice -- South. (Never had the opportunity to see this.)
Makavejev -- Switchboard Operator, aka Love Affair.
Naruse -- Anything really. Michael Kerpan recommends Repast, so I'll suggest that one.
Ozu -- Again, anything will be loved and adored. My preference would be a color film or a silent film. Hen in the Wind or Where Now Are The Dreams of Youth would be great, as I've not been able to see them yet.
Ray -- Nick, in this case. Johnny Guitar or Wind Across the Everglades.
Resnais -- Muriel or a disc of documentaries.
Straub/Huillet -- Again, anything.
Visconti -- Senso.
That's more than enough for now.
Akerman -- Jeanne Dielman or Les Rendez-Vous d'Anna. Or better, News From Home or a documentary.
Bellocchio -- Fists in the Pocket. (Never had the opportunity to see this.)
Erice -- South. (Never had the opportunity to see this.)
Makavejev -- Switchboard Operator, aka Love Affair.
Naruse -- Anything really. Michael Kerpan recommends Repast, so I'll suggest that one.
Ozu -- Again, anything will be loved and adored. My preference would be a color film or a silent film. Hen in the Wind or Where Now Are The Dreams of Youth would be great, as I've not been able to see them yet.
Ray -- Nick, in this case. Johnny Guitar or Wind Across the Everglades.
Resnais -- Muriel or a disc of documentaries.
Straub/Huillet -- Again, anything.
Visconti -- Senso.
That's more than enough for now.
Last edited by backstreetsbackalright on Tue Aug 16, 2005 2:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
- shirobamba
- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 1:23 pm
- Location: Germany
There´s a DVD with english DUB out, but I dunno about the qualiy:I have a bootleg original language uncut (I think it's uncut) letterbox DVD (no subtitles) that I managed to acquire from a seller in Eastern Europe through eBay, though the quality is shit. I would kill for MoC or Criterion (maybe through their rumored cult division) to do this film justice
http://www.bijouflix.com/goods/bijou_store1vcd_V.htm
(scroll down the page, it´s the 3rd item)
Maybe this is an acceptable placeholder until CC or MoC will do it?
- shirobamba
- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 1:23 pm
- Location: Germany
I saw 3 of Yanagimachi Mitsuo´s earlier films this week, and they left a deep impression on me, though this was the 3rd time I saw them. They would all make great follow ups to the "Imamura-Vengeance-is-Mine"-line of the MoC Japanese Summer series. The 3 in question are:
"Jukyusai no chizu" aka "19-sai no chizu" / The 19 year old´s Map (1979)
"Saraba itoshiki daichi" / Farewell to the Land (1982)
"Himatsuri" / The Firefestival (1985)
Though Yanagimachi was one of the most celebrated and critically acclaimed japanese independent filmmakers of the 80´s he virtually disappeared completely in the 90´s. I haven´t seen any of his later works, that were all international productions (perhaps someone can report on them?), but his early work is impressive and lasting IMHO, and deserves to be available on DVD.
"Jukyusai no chizu" aka "19-sai no chizu" / The 19 year old´s Map (1979)
"Saraba itoshiki daichi" / Farewell to the Land (1982)
"Himatsuri" / The Firefestival (1985)
Though Yanagimachi was one of the most celebrated and critically acclaimed japanese independent filmmakers of the 80´s he virtually disappeared completely in the 90´s. I haven´t seen any of his later works, that were all international productions (perhaps someone can report on them?), but his early work is impressive and lasting IMHO, and deserves to be available on DVD.
-
- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 9:46 am
-
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 7:35 am
- Location: Hong Kong
The general concensus in the industry, even in Japan, is that EUREKA was a fluke, since his other films are just as you said - mediocre to bad. So bad, in fact, that his latest was rejected from every festival until Pusan dumped it in an Asian panorama section.Michael Kerpan wrote:From what I've read, Aoyama's early films generally ranged from bad to mediocre.
Which is why I'm surprised that, in HUMANITY AND PAPER BALLOONS, Nick managed to get Tony Rayns and Aoyama Shinji on the same sentence without one party vehemently objecting!
-
- Joined: Tue Dec 28, 2004 9:46 am
I'm in the middle of reading Ingmar Bergman's "The Magic Lantern" and I got to the chapter about the making of Wild Strawberries today, and it hit me like a box of bricks...
MoC needs to release some of Victor Sjöström's silent works. From everything I've read, these are complete masterpieces. There was paragraph about how Bergman was enamored with working with the man who created some amazing pieces of film, and yet Victor seemed to think they were utter crap.
MoC needs to release some of Victor Sjöström's silent works. From everything I've read, these are complete masterpieces. There was paragraph about how Bergman was enamored with working with the man who created some amazing pieces of film, and yet Victor seemed to think they were utter crap.
- Pinback
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 4:50 pm
I'd really like to see MoC release some Korean films. I'm just starting to get seriously interested South Korean cinema, but the only stuff available anywhere is really recent.
Based almost entirely on my close viewing of the excellent, excellent documentary The Cinema on the Road: A Personal Essay on Cinema in Korea (Jang Sun-Woo, 1995), I'd suggest the following:
The Aimless Bullet (Yu Hyun-Mok, 1961)
Barefoot Youth (Kim Ki-Duk, 1964)
Declaration of Fools (Lee Jang-Ho, 1983)
Life and Death of the Hollywood Kid (Chung Ji-Young, 1994)
Also, some films by Im Kwon-Taek. Director of almost one hundred films, and Korea's most significant director by reputation, almost all of his films remain totally unseen outside Korea. Ticket (1986), Mandala (1981) and Fly High, Run Far (1991) would be especially welcome.
I'm sure there's a market for English-subtitled releases of less-recent Korean cinema; I hope someone taps it soon.
Based almost entirely on my close viewing of the excellent, excellent documentary The Cinema on the Road: A Personal Essay on Cinema in Korea (Jang Sun-Woo, 1995), I'd suggest the following:
The Aimless Bullet (Yu Hyun-Mok, 1961)
Barefoot Youth (Kim Ki-Duk, 1964)
Declaration of Fools (Lee Jang-Ho, 1983)
Life and Death of the Hollywood Kid (Chung Ji-Young, 1994)
Also, some films by Im Kwon-Taek. Director of almost one hundred films, and Korea's most significant director by reputation, almost all of his films remain totally unseen outside Korea. Ticket (1986), Mandala (1981) and Fly High, Run Far (1991) would be especially welcome.
I'm sure there's a market for English-subtitled releases of less-recent Korean cinema; I hope someone taps it soon.
- reaky
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 8:53 am
- Location: Cambridge, England
The earlier reference to Josef Von Sternberg set me thinking - of course, MoC will be rereleasing THE BLUE ANGEL, but is there any chance of a decent version of THE SHANGHAI GESTURE? I've only seen this on the diabolical Image DVD, which was enough to completely jaundice my view of the film. Does a decent print exist anywhere at all, and could MoC/Eureka get hold of it?
-
- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2004 1:13 pm
- Location: Kings County
- Contact:
-
- not perpee
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 3:41 pm
Devlinn, Terence Davies would make the cut if there was a nice webpage devoted to him. Those names are from the links down the righthandside of mastersofcinema.org.
-
Sai, we have a number of titles in mind, but none of them have bolted for the gate yet. It's quite frustrating... they're all taking a long time to come to fruition.
Personally, I wish we'dve made FRANCESCO #1, but it's too late now.
-
Sai, we have a number of titles in mind, but none of them have bolted for the gate yet. It's quite frustrating... they're all taking a long time to come to fruition.
Personally, I wish we'dve made FRANCESCO #1, but it's too late now.
- devlinnn
- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 3:23 am
- Location: three miles from space
By golly, a quick search and you're right peerpee - no devoted website. Haven't been to the UK for a number of years, but is Davies a forgotten man over there? Do his films play on TV, or in the rep cinemas. The BFI really has to get their act together in getting his work out on DVD - maybe Masters of Cinema can get involved?Devlinn, Terence Davies would make the cut if there was a nice webpage devoted to him. Those names are from the links down the righthandside of mastersofcinema.org.